Bans and blanket restrictions on social media, like the impending US TikTok ban or Australia’s recent age restrictions, are often presented as decisive solutions to complex problems. These measures promise to safeguard national security, protect user data, or shield vulnerable users from harm. Yet, they rarely achieve their intended goals. Instead, they create a paradox: rather than mitigating risks, such restrictions make platforms and user practices less governable. Users circumvent controls, oversight is fragmented, and transparency gives way to opacity—all while opportunities for meaningful governance are lost.
wtf is techpolicy dot press
hendrik@palaver.p3x.de 2 days ago
Really? They claim various things with a lot of certainty. But all they do is speculate... If it's that obvious, why isn't there any precedent or fact to back it up? I mean comparing it to the situation in a different country, about a different topic is quite a stretch. And to my knowledge, it's not even in place yet. So there shouldn't be any results to compare?!
UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world 2 days ago
Given the number of internet services that have been targeted for censorship or banning (Pornhub, anyone selling contraceptives across state lines, digital libraries like the Internet Archive) they’re going to be encouraged to learn.
Plenty of TikTok content creators have been working “How to get my content once the service has been banned” explainers into their feeds. And its not like this is a revolutionary new technology or one that’s difficult to implement on your machine.
hendrik@palaver.p3x.de 2 days ago
I mean the VPN providers themselves (at least some) have been quite busy promoting their services. For years already. NordVPN ads run on TV, at times every other Youtube video was "sponsored by NordVPN". So people should know about their existence.
But... It would be a massive surprise to me if the average user was going to change their habits. I've been telling people constantly not to give their flashlight app access to contacts, location and full administrator privileges. Told them to pay attention to their freedom and maybe not sell their soul to big tech if there's nice and lovely mail providers which have a foot massage ready for you for $1 a month. People don't care and they won't listen. They'll ask me "Yeah, but why don't you just WhatsApp and GMail?"
I see no way this is going to change, and they'll now suddenly pick up to fight for their freedom. I think that's a niche for some few Linux nerds. I'd be very happy, though, if I was wrong and they do...
homesweethomeMrL@lemmy.world 2 days ago
It also ensure those who don’t pay are tracked by default, which is a key component of not having privacy.